Reachability

If your application provides functionality that requires access to a network, it’s very important that your code include a customer alert or notification when the network is not available.

The Reachability sample application demonstrates how to use the System Configuration Reachability API to monitor the network state of an iPhone or iPod touch. Use this sample code to learn how to detect the absence of Wi-Fi and Wireless Wide Area Network (WWAN) services so your application knows when it’s necessary to produce a network error alert.

Your users will appreciate knowing when an application has no network access — and missing “network alerts” is the third most common reason for applications being returned to developers for modification.

I had to address this issue when implementing the in-app store for Demine. It’s not too much work once you see how it’s supposed to be done, and AAPL’s Reachability class can be used right out of the box. Read on for some implementation notes.

The Goal

For Demine, I didn’t want to implement a generic network alert. 99% of the time, it doesn’t matter whether the network is available or not, and needless alert boxes (“Oh, hey, if you wanted to do X, which you probably don’t, it wouldn’t work.”) just annoy the user. I wanted to implement a network alert that would be specific to the Store screens, and which would pop up when a network fault would interfere with their proper operation.

Reachability

The Reachability class wraps the SCNetworkReachability* stuff. It can be copied directly from the Reachability sample application into your project. The only wrinkle is that you must add the SystemConfiguration.framework to your project.

Preliminaries

To persist the Reachability object I’ll be creating, I add this to the Store declaration:

Reachability* reachability;

I also add a property to the Store extension definition in the implementation file:

@property (nonatomic, retain) Reachability* reachability;

… and a @synthesize reachability; to the Store implementation itself.

Code

There are two basic things to add. First, in viewDidLoad, I observe the kReachabilityChangedNotification notification, and set up the Reachability object:

Remarkably, the NSNotificationCenter business in dealloc doesn’t appear to be necessary, although it seems like it should be required to avoid crashes. (In fact, I accidentally omitted it from the Demine app currently on offer in the app store.) Store inherits from UITableViewController, so maybe the latter class’ dealloc includes a similar statement.

The final touch is a simple alert view handler, which dismisses the store on a network failure: